Clarus Financial Technology

Cross Currency Swap Review 2022

With Cross Currency Swap blogs continuing to perform well on the Clarus Blog each year, let’s take a look at what traded during 2022.

SDRView Volumes

SDRView shows the monthly volumes transacted of Cross Currency Basis swaps. These are, on the whole, the vanilla interbank type of mark-to-market cross currency swaps.

Volumes in Billions $ of XCCY Basis Swaps in EUR, GBP, JPY and AUD vs USD

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SDRView also shows the DV01 of cross currency swaps traded:

The overall pattern of volumes is somewhat similar between the two charts in 2022. January really is a big risk month for XCCY basis, and March was a real peak for risk – it wasn’t only short-end repositioning. The drop-off in December was even more marked on a DV01 basis as well.

Combining the two charts with the number of trades transacted each month gives us some idea as to “standard” trades in XCCY swap markets in 2022.

First up, average trade sizes in $Millions equivalent for each currency pair:

Showing that the average trade sizes for the year ranged from $85m in JPYUSD to $125m in EURUSD. The averages did vary a lot month-on-month however -for example, despite low volumes, average trade size was $158m in EURUSD in December.

And next average DV01 traded in thousands of $ for each currency:

Now, each of these tables are subject to the block reporting thresholds – so they are certainly understated, representing more of a “median” average than the “mean”. Anything from 3% to 10% of XCCY trades were reported above the block threshold each month:

Assuming block trades are evenly spread across all maturities (is that fair?), we can state that:

These averages can also be further refined by splitting the data between block trades and “normal” trades – let us know if you are interested in this type of analysis. I should also highlight that block thresholds will be changing in Q1 2023 – see my old blog for more on this:

SEF Trading

In terms of SEF Trading in vanilla XCCY basis, the proportion of SEF trading by trade count has been pretty stable in each month of 2022. Only 24-32% of trades were reported as off-SEF:

As a reminder, this doesn’t cover the whole global market – so it is difficult to say whether SEF trading in XCCY has seen a particular benefit from e.g. Brexit. We would need European (or UK!) transparency data to make a definitive judgement call.

Over on SEFView, we have the overall 2022 market share stats for Cross Currency Swaps per SEF:

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Two things to note with this data:

For the portion of the market that IS traded on-SEF, we now have trade-level transparency as to where a swap has traded. As per Amir’s blog below, which looked at USD Swaps:

Since December 5th, we can see which platforms Cross Currency Swaps have traded across:

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This allows us to monitor trades in real-time as they come in on each SEF via SDRView Professional, a significant change to how we have been able to use the data previously. It also allows us to monitor market share by:

For example:

Pretty interesting data for anyone involved in the markets and nice to see improvements to transparency data in the US.

In Summary

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